Materials Needed For Activity:
- Hand Out #1 Olaudah Equino and Elizabeth (Bett) Freeman
- Hand Out #2 Anthony Benezet and Benjamin Rush
- Hand Out #3 Moses Brown and Benjamin Lay
- Hand Out #4 Thomas and John Vickers
- Hand Out#5 Jesse Kersey
- Hand Out #6 Abolitionists
- Hand Out #7 People’s Hall in Ercildoun
- Hand Out #8 Pennsylvania Anti-Slavery Society
- Hand Out #9 Philadelphia Female Anti-Slavery Society
- Hand Out #10 Gallery Walk Evaluation Sheet
- Hand Out #11 Abolition Poster Gallery Walk Evaluation Sheets
Teacher Background:
Procedure:
Step 1: Explain to students that it is necessary for them to understand how key events during the early history of the Pennsylvania Colony are related and affected each other. A timeline will help them work through some of these important dates and events and be a reference as they study this early period of American history. All students will be given a packet with the seven Hand Outs for this project. They are to utilize the Lukens Steel Historical Timeline 1620-1854 on the NISHM website and any other material they may uncover in a search of the internet. The educator may also decide to share the Teacher Background Sheets with students.
Step 2: Divide the class into three groups. Tell them that they will be focusing on the time from 1682 to 1854. One group will complete the timeline for the years 1682 – 1810. The second group will complete the timeline from 1811 – 1832. The third group will complete the timeline for the years 1833 – 1854.
Step 3: Students will need to research key events in the history of their particular time span. Students should select only those events they believe are most important, including key successes and difficulties. The main emphasis of this assignment is the Pennock (and later Lukens/Houston) families and therefore they should look for “family” details. Students should be encouraged to draw symbols and pictures, use graphics from web sites, and write short descriptions to illustrate events on their timeline. The class should agree on a uniform size for paper if anything other than regular printing paper size is to be used, so the timeline can be clipped or taped together upon completion and displayed around the classroom. Butcher block paper or attachments to a clothesline may also be used for the timeline.
Step 4: Upon completion of their research and creation of their timelines, groups should present their timelines to the class and be able to explain why the events they chose for their time period were so important to the history of the Pennock family. They may do this by having one or two presenters from each group standing next to the area they researched so the timeline becomes a “living history timeline”. Discussion should also include examining cause and effect relationships between events. Did one time period seem to be more active than other time periods in terms of notable events?
Summary Activity:
After the class has discussed the events on the timeline, ask students why it is important to study these events. Why are these events important for the entire country, as well as the colony of Pennsylvania and the city of Coatesville? A useful discussion might also include exploring certain key points on the timeline to ask “what if” questions. What if the Leni-Lenape Indians had killed Penn’s Quakers at the beginning? What if the settlers had abandoned Pennsylvania? What if Rebecca Lukens had given in and turned the mill over to her brother? Ask students for their own “what if” questions.
Other Helpful Resources:
- 1780 Slave Register | Chester County, PA – Official Website
- Slavery in Chester County – PA-Roots
- Abolitionism in Chester County Pennsylvania
- Pennsylvania Free Blacks, 1790 census
- Hosanna Meeting House, Oxford, PA
- Hosanna AUMP History
- Lists and photos of stations on the underground railroad, by state
- Early anti-slavery (US Park Service)
- The Gilder Lehrman Center for the Study of Slavery, Resistance and Abolition
- Dorothy Porter Wesley Research Center, Inc.
- Letter from Thomas GARRETT to William STILL (1858), Delaware County, PA
- Death of a local ‘ex-slave’, General Jackson
- 1764 Uwchlan residents taxed for owning slaves
- Chester County’s ‘Hot Bed of Abolition’
- Chester County Quaker helped Underground Railroad and black equality in South
- Pennsylvania officially abolished slavery in 1780. But …
- Be Ye Therefore Perfect: Anti-Slavery and the Origins of the …
- SLAVERY in PENNSYLVANIA – slavenorth.com
- Pennsbury Township, Chester County, Pennsylvania – Wikipedia
- Patterns of Slaveholding in Colonial Pennsylvania: Chester …
- Isaac Mendenhall – Wikipedia
- Isaac & Dinah Mendenhall Historical Marker – hmdb.org
- Kennett’s Underground Railroad Center | Chester County …
- People’s Hall
- NISHM website
- Rebecca Lukens Resource Center
- Lukens Steel Historical Timeline 1620-1854
- North American Historical Timeline
- Primitive Hall-Chester County Pennsylvania
- Primitive Hall Virtual Tour with Wendy Cooper
- The Pennocks of Primitive Hall
- Rash’s Surname Archive
- What is Quakerism? -Friends Camp
- Quakerism-Definition, History & Beliefs
- William Penn
- William Penn
- Rebecca Lukens
- Rebecca Lukens: A Woman of Iron